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Oct 21, 2017
10/17
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road school, he teaches the road school, he are travels around the country and he teaches the latest fbi techniques to the local cops. in a sense, he is running away, i think of him as almost floundering, he's forgotten why it was so important that he be an fbi agent. ♪ ♪ sneets ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> rose: lbj is the new film about the nation's 36th president. rob rei invocatorer directs. woodie harrellson. ring from vice president to president in the 1960s. >> we wanted to look at lbj as a complete person and if we were going to do a biopic of lbj you need ten hours to go from his childhood in west texas and his legislative rise to power and become vice president and then president. what we wanted to do is just if we could limit the -- you know it's like in greek you know drama, you try to limit the time frame so you can explore a character more fully. and that's what we tried to do with this. i personally hated lyndon johnson when i was young. i was of draft age during that time. >> rose: because of vietnam. >> because of vietnam, he could have sent me to my death. what i've d
road school, he teaches the road school, he are travels around the country and he teaches the latest fbi techniques to the local cops. in a sense, he is running away, i think of him as almost floundering, he's forgotten why it was so important that he be an fbi agent. ♪ ♪ sneets ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> rose: lbj is the new film about the nation's 36th president. rob rei invocatorer directs. woodie harrellson. ring from vice president to president in the 1960s. >> we wanted to...
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Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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the fbi apparently acted by the book. you don't tip off the white house when you're engaging in a potentially criminal investigation. the agent in florida who then worried that the investigation was being stalled and went to a republican congressman who went to eric cantor, he has an illustrious record. he helped bring down the millennium plot. you can't blame him, either, for his apparent concern that this was not being studied appear prop it i can't tellly. so then the story got out, and i think general petraeus has acted honorably in resigning. i think he is going to do fine. he is going to get a book contract. he apparently wants to be president of princeton. he will have a year of probably giving speeches, making a lot of money. i don't feel sorry for him. >> if he wrote a book with the lady who wrote about him, paula broadwell, all in the education of david petraeus. he cooperated practically on the entire book. now he's going to write another book? >> he can write one about himself. he's not the author of this. thi
the fbi apparently acted by the book. you don't tip off the white house when you're engaging in a potentially criminal investigation. the agent in florida who then worried that the investigation was being stalled and went to a republican congressman who went to eric cantor, he has an illustrious record. he helped bring down the millennium plot. you can't blame him, either, for his apparent concern that this was not being studied appear prop it i can't tellly. so then the story got out, and i...
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Aug 25, 2013
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. >> after 12 years on the job, fbi director robert mueller is stepping down. now he warns that americans are joining radicals. >> it has become a rallying point, and that is a tragedy. for the first year or so of the rebellion it was a spontaneous, nonsectarian revolt against the government. that was a time when the government was very weak and international intervention would have been decisive. at this point, the jihadis have from other places, and where they are dominant, it is very problematic to try to have an intervention. the best we can do is try to support those who are not and hope theysts will prevail over the government over rebels who are not so savory. >> president mubarak was released from jail. >> who do you line up with in egypt? they had just had an election. do we support the military? do we do the muslim brotherhood? could the military possibly open up some spots for the opposition so they can build a coalition government? thend the arab spring, and we have no way forward because we are left with no good solutions for who is going to run th
. >> after 12 years on the job, fbi director robert mueller is stepping down. now he warns that americans are joining radicals. >> it has become a rallying point, and that is a tragedy. for the first year or so of the rebellion it was a spontaneous, nonsectarian revolt against the government. that was a time when the government was very weak and international intervention would have been decisive. at this point, the jihadis have from other places, and where they are dominant, it is...
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Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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the investigation done by the fbi, but they determined there was no question of loyalty, no national security compromise. they stop. there is another aspect of this thing, suitability for conduct. you can be a patriot, but if you are habitually to excess, that, a problem with the access to classified material. the justice department with all that i don't know why they did it. >> margaret? >> these things are done clandestinely until they are not. love is fleeting, gmamiil isn't. we are addicted to e-mail and we put things in it we don't want to be seen, but we hold the cia director to a higher standard. but i wonder with our military and political figures, to -- if it is in somewhat to elevated now. divorce is soaring in the military. these deployments are hard on families. people are weak and we are stupid in the throes of a romantic affair. do we want to get rid of people like general petraeus when there is no national security breach? the person who should be fired is that fbi agent and all the people who let that go up the chain of command. >> what do you make of that, nina? >> i
the investigation done by the fbi, but they determined there was no question of loyalty, no national security compromise. they stop. there is another aspect of this thing, suitability for conduct. you can be a patriot, but if you are habitually to excess, that, a problem with the access to classified material. the justice department with all that i don't know why they did it. >> margaret? >> these things are done clandestinely until they are not. love is fleeting, gmamiil isn't. we...
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Jul 31, 2017
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i'm sure many people in the justice department, fbi that are also leaking. isn't that also a reflection of the lack of loyalty? >> i think it's a reflection of the fact that trump's leadership style has not translated well from government to business. he lalikes to foster his staff, and maybe that's why people leak. that doesn't work in this context. also his tendency to be threatening and try to fire people, completely backfires with murkowski -- the senator from alaska, the fact the secretary called her up to threaten her. she has a lot of power over him. it's not just loyalty doesn't pay, but they aren't able to carry out on their threats either. so i think all of it creates chaos and undermines the agend aa over all. >> and there's question on what he did about health care and what he didn't do. no tonhall, no major speech about it. and he didn't barnstorm. he didn't go to alaska, didn't go to maine, go to these places -- arizona. he didn't use leverage his personal relationship with the base, the personal relationship with the voters to push this bill.
i'm sure many people in the justice department, fbi that are also leaking. isn't that also a reflection of the lack of loyalty? >> i think it's a reflection of the fact that trump's leadership style has not translated well from government to business. he lalikes to foster his staff, and maybe that's why people leak. that doesn't work in this context. also his tendency to be threatening and try to fire people, completely backfires with murkowski -- the senator from alaska, the fact the...
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Mar 24, 2017
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i'm sure st input into the fbi investigation. the fbi is probably looking at it for leads charlie when that came out i read it three times. >> all 28 pages was it. >> i don't know how many memos i don't know how many memos over a long period of time, etch memo two or three pages, it was a lot i read it three times. and i said to myself can i tell request i tell anything from this? does this tell me anything? and my answer was no i can't tell if there is anything in here that's true and i really can't tell whether there is anything in here that's false. why? why. >> because i didn't know who the sources were, chris had written source a, source b, source c. number one so i didn't know who the sources mr.. and number two, i didn't know how a source required the information. right so if you are my source, if are you my source and you give me a peeses of information you may be a very reliable source. you may tell me exactly what you know, answer my questions fully, you have beenorking for me for 20 years, right. you give me 1 percent
i'm sure st input into the fbi investigation. the fbi is probably looking at it for leads charlie when that came out i read it three times. >> all 28 pages was it. >> i don't know how many memos i don't know how many memos over a long period of time, etch memo two or three pages, it was a lot i read it three times. and i said to myself can i tell request i tell anything from this? does this tell me anything? and my answer was no i can't tell if there is anything in here that's true...
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Dec 14, 2016
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passed on to the department of homeland security and fbi. then the fbi had a fairly low-level special agent call the dnc and try to alert them to what was going on. he got the help desk like you and i do when you have a problem with your pc. eventually he got routed to a young cyber security consultant who had been hired by the dnc which is run pretty much on a shoestring budget -- >> but david given the history we've seen hacking. president obama himself knows first hand what chinese hacking looks like. why was this handed down from a low-level homeland security person to a low-level person at the dnc? >> great question because as you indicated in 2008 the chinese and russians got into the elections of president obama and senator john mccain. it was president obama's homeland security advisor who was then at the justice department who had first called dennis mcdonough to warn him of the hacking in 2008. these are people -- we have a u.s. government very aware of the threat here. what happened was the fbi person contacts the dnc and the pers
passed on to the department of homeland security and fbi. then the fbi had a fairly low-level special agent call the dnc and try to alert them to what was going on. he got the help desk like you and i do when you have a problem with your pc. eventually he got routed to a young cyber security consultant who had been hired by the dnc which is run pretty much on a shoestring budget -- >> but david given the history we've seen hacking. president obama himself knows first hand what chinese...
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americans were asked about their overall confidence in the fbi. it is now at an all-time low. among democrats, it has gone up four points. this is back in 2018. down 12 points among republicans. it has tanked a whopping 24 points. it is part of a larger point. doesn't that number were you? >> the number one important statistic has been two generations if they do the right thing most of the time. 75% said yes. 12%, 19%, it bounces around. phenomenally low. imagine walking around the city watching nbc, what i think what was glorious and inspiring buildings, and thinking that is full of monsters. all of that is illegitimate, it is a fraud. i can't even imagine that mindset, it is the mindset that says -- and frankly, a lot of people feel it is justified and probably is because of the failures of a lot of things happening in this country over that time. >> i get that. it is also the people who know better, not acting better and not speaking better. knowing full well what is being said about the fbi, about government, what is being said about innocent people is wrong. and not stand
americans were asked about their overall confidence in the fbi. it is now at an all-time low. among democrats, it has gone up four points. this is back in 2018. down 12 points among republicans. it has tanked a whopping 24 points. it is part of a larger point. doesn't that number were you? >> the number one important statistic has been two generations if they do the right thing most of the time. 75% said yes. 12%, 19%, it bounces around. phenomenally low. imagine walking around the city...
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Apr 26, 2013
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>> well, our understanding is that those warnings came into the fbi and the fbi took them seriously and actually-- actually interviewed tamerlan three times and interviewed his parents and did a rather extensive database on them. they were told by the russians in kind of vague terms our reporting is showing that he was somehow connected to muslim extremists in russia. and he-- they were told that he was a threat to russia, not to the u.s. but to russia. so the fbi tried to run this to ground. they didn't find any derogatory evidence. they said as much. and they put him on something called the tide list which stands for terrorist identity terror morning database t is the lowest level database that they have, so-called terrorist watch list. they have about three quarters of a million people on it. so it is a very low level database. and he was put on that. and then after the russians contacted the cia, the cia also suggested that he be put on the tide list and he was. so that, those things seem very consistent. >> woodruff: and rising now, criticism, from some republican senators that the
>> well, our understanding is that those warnings came into the fbi and the fbi took them seriously and actually-- actually interviewed tamerlan three times and interviewed his parents and did a rather extensive database on them. they were told by the russians in kind of vague terms our reporting is showing that he was somehow connected to muslim extremists in russia. and he-- they were told that he was a threat to russia, not to the u.s. but to russia. so the fbi tried to run this to...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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so for example, the nsa and the fbi, myself, general alexander for the nsa. bob muller for the fbi, myself, met with a particular group of executives that have major roles in the so-called isps, the internet service providers. what they could possibly do. we've met with leaders in private industry in terms of the core critical infrastructure of the country as to what they can possibly do. >> have cyberthreats moved to a new level so that when you're being briefed on people who are actually trying to physically attack the united states, this is also a standard part of what you're told about people who threaten the nation? >> yes. i receive information about cyberactors or people using cybernetworks on a daily basis. and as i said, we receive thousands of reports that come into us from private industry every year. >> suarez: is that a new kind of war? if you are not trying to blow something up or kill americans, but you're trying to steal a wing that took years to develop from a private heir space manufacturer, trying to steal a program that took years and a lo
so for example, the nsa and the fbi, myself, general alexander for the nsa. bob muller for the fbi, myself, met with a particular group of executives that have major roles in the so-called isps, the internet service providers. what they could possibly do. we've met with leaders in private industry in terms of the core critical infrastructure of the country as to what they can possibly do. >> have cyberthreats moved to a new level so that when you're being briefed on people who are...
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of staff reince priebus said today the president-elect is waiting to see the final report from the fbi and cia about russian interference, and denied there was any contact or coordination between the trump campaign or trump associates and the russians. >> of course, we didn't interface with the russians. i mean, this whole thing is a spin job. and i think what the democrats ought to do is look in the mirror and face the reality that they lost the election. and they lost the election because they're so and completely out of touch with the american people that they're so shell-shocked and they can't believe it. >> stewart: today, hillary clinton campaign chairman john podesta said an independent investigation is needed to find out what, if anything, the trump campaign knew. >> i think really what mr. trump knew but what a trump inc know and when did they know it, were they in touch with the russians. i think those are still open questions and the electors have a right to know what the answers are. >> stewart: security forces in jordan have stormed a popular tourist site where gunmen kill
of staff reince priebus said today the president-elect is waiting to see the final report from the fbi and cia about russian interference, and denied there was any contact or coordination between the trump campaign or trump associates and the russians. >> of course, we didn't interface with the russians. i mean, this whole thing is a spin job. and i think what the democrats ought to do is look in the mirror and face the reality that they lost the election. and they lost the election...
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Jul 21, 2017
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it is a decision by the president to have a private conversation with the former fbi director but then prompted the special counsel, it prompted all the reshuffling within the investigative units and the justice department. my sores at the whitehouse say charlie that the president believes that he really doesn't have an exit plan here. his lawyers, he's brought so many in, both on the insight team and the outside team are telling him to be more disciplined, to not weigh in on the day by day developments. but the president feels like he has to be his own defender. that came through in the "new york times" interview. without sessions fighting his fight, without his lawyers being out there in an aggressive way, he thinks he has to be the spokesman and the warrior at the same time. >> rose: what happens to jeff sessions as attorney general? >> it is an intrigue drama within the trump administration. i've covered the now attorney general for a long time, back to his senate days and he was the ideological core for what trumpism became in 2015 and 2016, this populist nationalist fusion of con
it is a decision by the president to have a private conversation with the former fbi director but then prompted the special counsel, it prompted all the reshuffling within the investigative units and the justice department. my sores at the whitehouse say charlie that the president believes that he really doesn't have an exit plan here. his lawyers, he's brought so many in, both on the insight team and the outside team are telling him to be more disciplined, to not weigh in on the day by day...
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Jul 7, 2012
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the fbi web site has information on how to check if individual computers are infected. those are some of the day's major stories. now, back to judy. >> woodruff: banks and the way some have operated were back at the center of attention again this week. the focus this time is on the british bank barclays, and how it and others altered lending rates for profits. margaret warner has the story. >> warner: the scandal ventures on a key interest rate called libor and attempts to manipulate. last week barclays paid $450 million in fines to subtle accusation by british and u.s. regulators that helped rig the libor rate in a way that benefitted its business. lay bore is the acronym for the london interbank offered rate it is determined by what banks report they are paying to borrow from other banks. the rate has huge significance. it's used to set interest rates in more than 350 trillion dollars of contracts globally ranging from home mortgages to complicated financial swaps. the settlement set up a firestorm leading to the resignation this week of barclays c.e.o. robert diamon
the fbi web site has information on how to check if individual computers are infected. those are some of the day's major stories. now, back to judy. >> woodruff: banks and the way some have operated were back at the center of attention again this week. the focus this time is on the british bank barclays, and how it and others altered lending rates for profits. margaret warner has the story. >> warner: the scandal ventures on a key interest rate called libor and attempts to...
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Dec 30, 2016
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president obama says he will release the report by the fbi and the department of homeland security, which will show the evidence which he has that this was russia behind this hacking into the democratic party e-mails. all who were following the u.s. presidential election will remember that the hacks revealed embarrassing details by hillary clinton's closest aides written to and from various senior democratic party officials, and they were released on wikileaks. now, it has been the view of the cia that russia was behind us hacking, the cyberattack, and that it was orchestrated by the highest levels of russian government. president obama back in october warned vladimir putin that there would be repercussions if he was seen to interfere with u.s. democracy. today president obama has come good on that promise. he has decided to act. he says the actions were not just for the cyber hacking but also in retaliation for what he describes as harassment against american diplomats in moscow. now, the action he is taking is expelling 35 russian officials from washington and san francisco. they are de
president obama says he will release the report by the fbi and the department of homeland security, which will show the evidence which he has that this was russia behind this hacking into the democratic party e-mails. all who were following the u.s. presidential election will remember that the hacks revealed embarrassing details by hillary clinton's closest aides written to and from various senior democratic party officials, and they were released on wikileaks. now, it has been the view of the...
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May 11, 2017
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think the investigation is potentially in jeopardy, depending on how the new foeb director decides-- fbi director decides to pursue this investigation. >> brangham: adam entous of the "washington post," thank you so much. >> thank you. >> woodruff: in the day's other news, south korea's new liberal president moon jae-in took the oath of office today in seoul. the country's election commission officially certified moon's victory, after he received more than 40% of the vote. his predecessor, park geun-hye, was ousted in a corruption scandal. after moon was sworn into office, he vowed to unite the country and negotiate peace with foreign nations. >> ( translated ): i will urgently try to solve the security crisis. i'll be always on the move for peace in the korean peninsula. if necessary, i will fly straight to washington. i will go to beijing and tokyo, and if the conditions allow, to pyongyang as well. >> woodruff: president moon's nominee to head the national intelligence service said the new leader will only visit pyongyang when "the north korean nuclear problem begins to settle." in sy
think the investigation is potentially in jeopardy, depending on how the new foeb director decides-- fbi director decides to pursue this investigation. >> brangham: adam entous of the "washington post," thank you so much. >> thank you. >> woodruff: in the day's other news, south korea's new liberal president moon jae-in took the oath of office today in seoul. the country's election commission officially certified moon's victory, after he received more than 40% of the...
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Jul 28, 2017
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is not even taken his job yet, is he not even officially in the job yet, is publicly calling for an fbi investigation of the white house chief of staff. and and twitter. >> rose: and we conclude this evening with singer songwriter conor oberst and a performance from his latest album salutations. >> the hope of course is that i think all art is a communications, you are kind of like, you are putting on the little balloon and throwing it in the air and you don't know if anyone is going to receive it on the other side. but that is the hope, you know. >> politics, and music. when we continue.
is not even taken his job yet, is he not even officially in the job yet, is publicly calling for an fbi investigation of the white house chief of staff. and and twitter. >> rose: and we conclude this evening with singer songwriter conor oberst and a performance from his latest album salutations. >> the hope of course is that i think all art is a communications, you are kind of like, you are putting on the little balloon and throwing it in the air and you don't know if anyone is...
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Dec 13, 2016
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the fbi isn't there yet but now you have a congressional investigation called for. this is-- where are we? >> this is the election that will never end. the 2016 will continue to go on and on and on. look, where we are right now, you have the cia, again, this is a document that was leaked, they haven't come out publicly or made a public statement about this, but was leaked to "the washington post" that they have determined that the russians were involved in not just hacking emails but in trying to insure that done all trump was elected. congressional leaders in the house, in the senate, on the r epublican side, taking a look at. this basically what they're saying is they're not going as far as donald trump saying that this is absolutely riddick luses, i don't believe this is possible. they do say this is something we need to look into. but what we're not going to do is set up a special investigation. just going to go through normal procedure. we're not going to set up something like a 9/11 commission, something like that to look at this. and so what you have are the
the fbi isn't there yet but now you have a congressional investigation called for. this is-- where are we? >> this is the election that will never end. the 2016 will continue to go on and on and on. look, where we are right now, you have the cia, again, this is a document that was leaked, they haven't come out publicly or made a public statement about this, but was leaked to "the washington post" that they have determined that the russians were involved in not just hacking...
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Aug 4, 2016
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with nypd, isis uses social media encourages and seeks to, we have three terms that james comely the fbi director coined, a direct attack which they would send as they did in paris agents out of syria in an attack in which they give instructions to an individual and how to carry out one. and an inspired attack where just social media, grab a knife, grab an ax, get a car. and we've seen repeatedly where people will respond to that. that inspired act is the most difficult. how do i identify, unless you spot from social media constant scan scanning. when you see something radicalized or starting to act strangely, report it. >> rose: we have access to the computer files of people who do these things often they are killed in the act of the terrorism or the mass murder. what are we learning? is there profile of them? >> there's no one consistent profile. there are various thing that might set them off. the individual that spontaneously attack four of my uniforms, three officers standing on the corner with a hatchet, almost killing one of them before he himself was killed by soaferl -- several
with nypd, isis uses social media encourages and seeks to, we have three terms that james comely the fbi director coined, a direct attack which they would send as they did in paris agents out of syria in an attack in which they give instructions to an individual and how to carry out one. and an inspired attack where just social media, grab a knife, grab an ax, get a car. and we've seen repeatedly where people will respond to that. that inspired act is the most difficult. how do i identify,...
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states intelligence oversight between the courts and the congress and the inspector general and then the fbi, the departments of justice, you name it, has it all. so i think what we can do is have some confidence builders for the american people to look at this and understand, ah, one person can't run off and listen your phone call or read your e-mail. none of that is happening. >> warner: so are you saying the president needs to maybe bring more transparency, do exactly what's being done, who is doing it, and what the safeguards are? >> i think that would be incredibly helpful to do that. >> warner: but isn't there then tension between that and how much you want to divulge, he wants to divulge? >> absolutely. i do think we can talk about some of the oversight we have on certain aspects of the program. certainly the business records portion, mehtadata on business record, phone records. that certainly, i think-- . >> warner: that is the sort of bulk collection of phone records, who were called, when you call and the length of the call. >> with the exception we don't know who you are or where
states intelligence oversight between the courts and the congress and the inspector general and then the fbi, the departments of justice, you name it, has it all. so i think what we can do is have some confidence builders for the american people to look at this and understand, ah, one person can't run off and listen your phone call or read your e-mail. none of that is happening. >> warner: so are you saying the president needs to maybe bring more transparency, do exactly what's being...
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, we can't know for certain who these people are coming -- >> don't let them know -- the -- and the fbi and homeland security said we can't know for certain, you've got to err on the side of the safety and security of the american people. senator i understand -- >> by trashing all muslims? >> senator kaine let me ask you, secretary clinton has talked about intelligence surge, what exactly would an intelligence surge look like and how would that help identify terrorists with no operational connection to a foreign terrorist oregon nation. >> it's two things, elaine. it's first, dramatically expanding our intelligence capacities by hiring great professionals, but also we've got some of the best in tell and cyber-employees in the world right here in the united states working for many of our private sector companies. so, it involves increase but striking great partnerships with some of our cyber and in tell experts in the private sector to consistent with constitution principles gather more intelligence. second piece of this is really, really important. it also means, creating stronger allia
, we can't know for certain who these people are coming -- >> don't let them know -- the -- and the fbi and homeland security said we can't know for certain, you've got to err on the side of the safety and security of the american people. senator i understand -- >> by trashing all muslims? >> senator kaine let me ask you, secretary clinton has talked about intelligence surge, what exactly would an intelligence surge look like and how would that help identify terrorists with no...
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the battle between the fbi and apple over unlocking a terrorist's iphone played out before congress today. the two sides argued their points before the house judiciary committee, as hari sreenivasan reports. >> the tools you are counting on us to keep you safe are becoming less and less effective. >> we're doing this because we think that protecting the security and the privacy of hundreds of millions of iphone users is the right thing to do. >> sreenivasan: fbi director james comey and apple lead counsel bruce sewell used the hearing to lay out the cases they're making in federal court. the fight centers around an apple iphone used by syed farook last december in san bernardino, california. he and his wife, tashfeen malik, shot dead 14 people. federal agents have been unable to access the phone's content due to apple's encryption, and comey says it bespeaks a larger problem. >> all of our lives are on these devices which is why it's so important that they be private. that also means all of the criminals, pedophiles, terrorists lives are on these devices. and if they can't, they are warra
the battle between the fbi and apple over unlocking a terrorist's iphone played out before congress today. the two sides argued their points before the house judiciary committee, as hari sreenivasan reports. >> the tools you are counting on us to keep you safe are becoming less and less effective. >> we're doing this because we think that protecting the security and the privacy of hundreds of millions of iphone users is the right thing to do. >> sreenivasan: fbi director james...
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Jul 25, 2015
07/15
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and that's the fbi's original definition. woodruff: so technically what happened last night in louisiana wouldn't be considered a mass killing? >> that might be considered a mass shooting not a mass killing. we are interested in the four or more dead. woodruff: what have you learned about the people who do those shoots, who are they? >> sure. they're overwhelmingly male. 97% of the cases they're men. their average age is about 30 but it really ranges. we had teenagers to older adults. men tend to use more guns. women tend to kill this other ways. arson, drownings things like that. woodruff: and what did you learn about the circumstances? about who the victims are, how these things -- or is there a pattern? >> there's not necessarily a pattern but there are certain things that stand out. more than 50% are family-related. so -- and in -- woodruff: more than 50%? >> more than 50%. in well more than 50% of the cases the victim know their shooter. stranger on strange are crime that doesn't happen very much, only about 15% of the k
and that's the fbi's original definition. woodruff: so technically what happened last night in louisiana wouldn't be considered a mass killing? >> that might be considered a mass shooting not a mass killing. we are interested in the four or more dead. woodruff: what have you learned about the people who do those shoots, who are they? >> sure. they're overwhelmingly male. 97% of the cases they're men. their average age is about 30 but it really ranges. we had teenagers to older...
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Feb 19, 2016
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he called for a boycott of apple products, until the tech company complied with an fbi order to unlock a phone used by one of the san bernadino shooters. >> first of all, apple ought to give the security for that phone, okay? (applause) what i think you ought to do is boycott apple until such time as they give that security number. how do you like that? boycott apple. >> woodruff: although trump seems to defy conventions, south carolina history tells us one thing for sure: the palmetto state has a unique brand of sharp-edged politics. political director lisa desjardins reports. >> reporter: the g.o.p. race is down to six candidates, and they all know the saying, "south carolina picks presidents." >> you all have the chance to reset the race. that's what south carolinians have done in the past. >> and now, south carolina is going to play the role that it has always played in presidential race: the historic role of choosing presidents. >> we make presidents. let's make marco rubio the next president of the united states. >> reporter: the palmetto state has voted for the eventual republic
he called for a boycott of apple products, until the tech company complied with an fbi order to unlock a phone used by one of the san bernadino shooters. >> first of all, apple ought to give the security for that phone, okay? (applause) what i think you ought to do is boycott apple until such time as they give that security number. how do you like that? boycott apple. >> woodruff: although trump seems to defy conventions, south carolina history tells us one thing for sure: the...
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Feb 18, 2012
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khalifi was taken into custody with an inoperable gun and inert explosives given to him by undercover fbi agents. he is not believed to be associated with al-qaeda, but had been under surveillance for at least a year. economic help for greece seemed to edge closer today as top european leaders expressed confidence that a second bailout deal can be worked out next week. german chancellor angela merkel said she was optimistic a meeting on monday of european finance ministers will clear the deal. greece is in line for a $170 billion rescue package, but first, the country must agree to a host of debt-cutting programs. the uncertainty in the greek situation kept markets in limbo and struggling for direction. on wall street, the dow jones industrial average flirted with the 13,000 mark before ending the day up 45 points to close just under 12,950. the nasdaq fell eight points to close above 2,951. for the week, the dow gained more than 1%; the nasdaq rose 1.7%. in olympia, greece, thieves stole more than 60 priceless ancient artifacts from a museum dedicated to the olympic games. police called
khalifi was taken into custody with an inoperable gun and inert explosives given to him by undercover fbi agents. he is not believed to be associated with al-qaeda, but had been under surveillance for at least a year. economic help for greece seemed to edge closer today as top european leaders expressed confidence that a second bailout deal can be worked out next week. german chancellor angela merkel said she was optimistic a meeting on monday of european finance ministers will clear the deal....
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Nov 9, 2016
11/16
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or tale of three comments by director of the fbi james comey. for clip contam pain went from salvation to despair to resurrection perhaps. >> i'm here to give you update on the fbi's investigation of secretary clinton's use of personal e-mail system during her time at secretary of state. what we did not find clear evidence that secretary clinton or her colleagues intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified information, there is evidence that they were extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified information. although department of justice makes final decisions on matters like this, we are expressing to justice our view that no charges are appropriate in this case. >> most cases if the fbi director comes out says we don't think there's any reason to charge you, that is pretty good news. did it strike that you way for clinton? >> well, when you consider what happened with the -- as ever news organization, the bombshell, nine or ten days ago that they discovered new e-mails then two days before electio
or tale of three comments by director of the fbi james comey. for clip contam pain went from salvation to despair to resurrection perhaps. >> i'm here to give you update on the fbi's investigation of secretary clinton's use of personal e-mail system during her time at secretary of state. what we did not find clear evidence that secretary clinton or her colleagues intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified information, there is evidence that they were extremely careless...
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Jul 22, 2016
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corruption has reached a level like never, ever, before in our country. [ cheering and applause ] when the fbi director says that the secretary of state was "extremely careless" and "negligent," in handling our classified secrets, i also know that these terms are minor compared to what she actually did.or they were just used to save her from facing justice for her terrible, terrible crimes. in fact, her single greatest accomplishment may be committing such an egregious crime and getting away with it - especially others who have done far less have paid so dearly. when that same secretary of state rakes in millions of dollars trading access ands favors to special interests and foreign powers, i know the time for action has come. i have joined the political arena so that the powerful can no longer beat up on people that cannot defend themselves. nobody knows the system better than me. which is why i alone can fix it. i have seen firsthand how the system is rigged against our citizens, just like it was rigged against bernie sanders - he never had a chance. never had a chance. but his supporters wi
corruption has reached a level like never, ever, before in our country. [ cheering and applause ] when the fbi director says that the secretary of state was "extremely careless" and "negligent," in handling our classified secrets, i also know that these terms are minor compared to what she actually did.or they were just used to save her from facing justice for her terrible, terrible crimes. in fact, her single greatest accomplishment may be committing such an egregious crime...